Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
He built a mill there and was the first of many such textile and lumber industries to locate in the area. The settlement was then known as Morphy's Falls. In 1829, the area was renamed Carleton Place, after a street in Glasgow, Scotland, when a post office was constructed. It became a village in 1870, and a town in 1890.
shares Gore Street East, Perth, with County Road 43 part of a relay of County Roads 10 linking Richmond to Kingston: 11: Wilson Street River Road County Road 17 County Road 29 Appleton 12: McDonald's Corners Road Markle Road Mill Street South Street Pine Grove Road County Road 15 County Road 36 Lanark, Playfairville, McDonald's Corners, Elphin 14
Brantwood Place Gates: Main Street (at Beckwith Road) Capital: ... 1127 Mill Street: Rideau-Jock: 1859–60 (Mill); 1868 (House) ... 100 Huxley Street: West Carleton ...
The menu at Mill Street Grill is so popular that it won first place in Virginia Living's Best of Virginia 2024 for fine dining in Staunton. They also nabbed second place for steakhouse.
Mill Street Brewery is a brewery in Toronto, Ontario, Canada that is a part of Anheuser–Busch InBev and named after Mill Street where it is located. During its first decade of operation, as an independent brewer, Mill Street won several awards including Golden Tap Awards for Best Toronto Microbrewery ('04-'08) and Best Toronto Beer (for Tankhouse Ale: '04-'07), and was named "Canadian ...
Mill Street may refer to: . Mill Street, Kent, a location in England; Mill Street, Norfolk, a location in England; Mill Street, Oxford, England; Mill Street (Perth, Scotland) Mill Street (Perth, Western Australia)
The Canadian Pacific Railway (CPR) station in Carleton Place, Ontario, Canada, is a single-story train station that was built between 1921 and 1922 and currently stands at 110 Miguel Street. [1] In 2007, it was listed in the Canadian Register of Historic Places . [ 1 ]
The plaza was built on the site of a five-story flour mill built by Dr. Eliakim Crosby in 1831. A diversion dam was built on the Little Cuyahoga River in Middlebury, from which a canal brought water south down the present Main Street, turning right at Mill Street to deliver power to the mill at Lock Five, where the plaza's hotel is now.